THIS film filled me with hate – hate for the terrorists who killed thousands of innocent people on 9/11 and hate for all the murderous Muslim fanatics still out there who even now continue to hold the world hostage.

It’s a feeling akin to the one many of us had in the days and weeks following the attacks – unrequited anger coupled with a robust appetite for revenge.

Four years after the attacks, it’s not a bad thing at all for a TV movie to rekindle those emotions since we’re still fighting the war that started that day.

“The Flight That Fought Back” re-creates the story of United Flight 93, the one that took off from Newark Airport for San Francisco and later crashed in open fields in Somerset County, Pa., after passengers attacked the hijackers and foiled their plan to crash the jet somewhere in Washington.

This innovative, 90-minute, made-for-TV movie – narrated by Kiefer Sutherland and scheduled to air without commercials – adheres strictly to the known facts about the plot hatched after passengers and cabin crew members

learned via cellphone calls from loved ones that three other hijacked planes had already been used as missiles at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

By casting only unknown actors in its recreation of the on-board rebellion, the movie drives home the point that the heroes of Flight 93 were just ordinary folks caught up in an extraordinary situation.

Their heroics cost them their lives and probably saved countless others.

The movie combines the re-enactments with testimony from the real parents, spouses and siblings of the passengers.

The interviews are especially moving when the survivors recall their last phone calls and voicemail messages – some of which you’ll hear – from their loved ones on the doomed plane.

At 10:03 a.m., Flight 93 hit the ground upsidedown at a speed of 580 mph.

Very little remained of the aircraft, its 33 passengers and seven crew members, but after you watch this movie, you